Saturday, September 21, 2024

Guide to Masks as Art Since the Early 20th Century


Mask-making may be one of humanity’s oldest art forms. In the 20th and 21st centuries, fine art and mask-making have collided to create new artforms and potent combinations of familiar genres. 

What follows is a brief survey of how masks and mask-making has intersected with the art world over the last 100 or so years. Feel free to click around to learn more about different eras. 

For more genre guides like this, check out our post A Rough Guide to Every Digital Art Genre We Could Think Of


Masks and 20th Century Art

Pablo Picasso and Cubism

In the early 20th century, Pablo Picasso was influenced by African masks, leading to the development of Cubism. His work, such as Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, reflects this influence by breaking from traditional forms to explore new perspectives.


Comparison of Picasso’s Cubist portraits and African masks. Credit: The Collector

Surrealism and Man Ray

Surrealists, like Man Ray in Noire et Blanche, used masks to explore the subconscious, contrasting the animate with the inanimate and questioning reality.


Noire et Blanche by Man Ray

Sidney Nolan and Ned Kelly

Sidney Nolan’s series on Ned Kelly uses Kelly’s metal mask to symbolize rebellion and mythologize the Australian outlaw.


The chase by Sidney Nolan

Guerrilla Girls

The Guerrilla Girls used gorilla masks to conceal their identities while protesting sexism and racism in the art world, turning anonymity into a symbol of resistance and empowerment.


Guerrilla Girls Flyer

Cindy Sherman

Cindy Sherman’s self-portraits use masks and disguises to challenge stereotypes and explore identity fluidity, critiquing societal norms.


Selection of Cindy Sherman self-portraits. Credit: The Collector

Rebecca Horn

Rebecca Horn’s wearable sculptures, like Pencil Mask and Cockatoo Mask, alter interactions and explore intimacy and identity boundaries.


Pencil Mask by Rebecca Horn

Christo and Jeanne-Claude

Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s wrapped installations, such as the wrapped Reichstag, transform familiar structures into mysterious forms, challenging perceptions.


Wrapped Reichstag by Christo and Jeanne-Claude

Francis Bacon

Francis Bacon’s works often feature grotesque, mask-like figures to convey existential pain and human vulnerability.


Study for Velazquez Pope II by Francis Bacon

Gillian Wearing

Gillian Wearing’s Confess All On Video. Don’t Worry You Will Be in Disguise uses masks to encourage subjects to reveal secrets, exploring identity and societal masks.


Still from Confess All On Video. Don’t Worry You Will Be in Disguise by Gillian Wearing

Masks and 21st Century Art

Christoph Hefti

Christoph Hefti’s World Mask is a stunning fusion of traditional and contemporary art. This wool and silk rug, hand-knotted in Nepal, combines elements from African, Tibetan, Guatemalan, and Mexican masks into a single hybrid face, reflecting a globalized world, where cultural boundaries blur and diverse traditions merge into new forms of expression.


World Mask by Christoph Hefti

Gauri Gill

Gauri Gill’s Acts of Appearance series uses masks to explore rural life in India. Collaborating with local artists, she creates masks that depict everyday people and animals. These masks transform mundane scenes into surreal tableaux, highlighting the intersection of tradition and modernity in rural India.


From Acts of Appearance by Gauri Gill

Edson Chagas

Edson Chagas’ OIKONOMOS series critiques contemporary consumer culture by replacing masks with bags covering the artist’s face to symbolize the erosion of individuality in a consumer-driven world.


From OIKONOMOS by Edson Chagas

Kader Attia

Kader Attia’s installations often explore the concept of repair and reconstruction. In The Repair from Occident to Extra-Occidental Cultures, he uses masks to illustrate how different cultures address trauma and healing. The masks, juxtaposed with prosthetics, challenge viewers to consider how societies mend both physical and psychological wounds.


From The Repair from Occident to Extra-Occidental Cultures by Kader Attia

Aneta Grzeszykowska

Aneta Grzeszykowska’s Selfie series uses masks to challenge the digital culture of self-representation. By creating mutilated-looking masks of her own face, she critiques the obsession with self-image and the facade of social media and raises questions about authenticity and the nature of self-portraiture in the digital age.


From Selfie by Aneta Grzeszykowska

Masks and On-Chain Art

Foodmasku

Antonius Oki Wiriadjaja, also known as Foodmasku, is a New York City-based artist and activist began the Foodmasku project in April 2020, during the height of the pandemic. 

A former Fulbright Scholar in Indonesia, Wiriadjaja has turned his daily meals into an art form, crafting intricate masks and headpieces from edible items. His work explores themes of identity, consumption, and the interplay between art and everyday life. Foodmasku has garnered significant attention, being selected as one of the New York Times’s top Instagram art accounts and expanding into web3 with his gourmet masks.

Wiriadjaja’s Foodmasku project is both aesthetically innovative and delightful while also serving as a medium for expressing pandemic-related anxiety and confusion. Through daily photographs and performances, he turned personal trauma and social challenges into a unique artistic vision, blending humor, creativity, and social commentary. And it’s also been a great way for him to learn how to cook. 


Loxodonta by Foodmasku

Brian Cattelle

Brian Cattelle’s Corrupted Cognition is a series of grotesque black-and-white collage masks using cut-outs from outsized printed portraits to create otherworldly weirdos. 

Cattelle’s stated intention is to expose viewers to exactly the kind of thing they instinctively do not want to see, and — rather than desensitize through shock or disgust — invite those put-off viewers to reconsider their unconscious repulsion as the only truly undesirable trait in play.  

It is telling that Cattelle — traditionally a black-and-white photographer — chose masks as the medium for this message because, if there is any art form that prompts embodiment of a concept, it would be the mask. The characters of Corrupted Cognition are not 2D freaks and geeks but invitations to see in space and to insert yourself into the consciousness of the other, distorting your current default programming in favor of a widened worldview. 


Mavis by Brian Cattelle

David Henry Nobody Jr.

If Cindy Sherman had been born in a circus, she might’ve turned out like David Henry Nobody Jr., a performance and video artist known for his provocative and often surreal art. His hilarious, visceral live and recorded performances-as-self-portraits use his body as a canvas for striking and sometimes disturbing images.  

Using various media such as photography, video, sculpture, costume, and makeup, he explores a wide range of themes, often critiquing society, consumerism, and identity through potent visual puns. His seems to be a medium and approach all his own, and one in which he is equal parts prolific and profound. 


Burning Down Nobody’s House by David Henry Nobody Jr. 

Karen Jerzyk

Karen Jerzyk, a New Hampshire-based photographer since 2003, began her career in concert photography before transitioning to portraiture. Her diverse artistic pursuits have expanded into sculpting, painting, set design, and wardrobe design, demonstrating her multifaceted creative abilities. Jerzyk’s work is characterized by a unique blend of surrealism and narrative depth. 

During the COVID-19 pandemic, she adapted ingeniously, using mannequins and sculpted masks to continue her conceptual photographic work. 


Midnight Creature Double Feature by Karen Jerzyk

For updates on all of our upcoming editorial features and artist interviews, subscribe to our newsletter below.

Related Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Stay Connected

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0SubscribersSubscribe

Latest Articles